Lamb v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

48 S.W. 659, 147 Mo. 171, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 13, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 48 S.W. 659 (Lamb v. Missouri Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamb v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 48 S.W. 659, 147 Mo. 171, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 138 (Mo. 1898).

Opinions

BURGESS, J.

— This is an action by the plaintiff Mrs. Lamb (her husband Harvey Lamb joining in the suit with her), for $10,000 damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by her being run against, knocked down and bruised about the face, head and limbs, and her left heel and the under portion of her left foot crushed by a tender, which was attached to one of defendant’s engines.

The case was tried to a jury who rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiffs assessing the damages at $3,000, upon which judgment was rendered. Defendant appeals.

The amended petition upon which the case was tried alleges that the injury occurred in the city of Pleasant Hill on the sixteenth day of June, 1893, under the following circireumstances.

“That on said day plaintiff, Jessie Lamb, was walking on the public sidewalk on the west side of the public highway and street .called "Wyoming street, leading from the southern portion of said city in a northwesterly direction, being one of the principal streets in said city, and which crosses said railroad in a northwesterly direction from and about one hundred yards of the defendant’s depot in said city, and in the business portion thereof. While said plaintiff was in the act of crossing said defendant’s railroad track at Wyoming street aforesaid, about eight o’clock and thirty minutes, on the evening of said day, it being dark and cloudy at the time, the defendant by its agents, servants and employees, while operating a locomotive engine and tender on said road at said crossing, carelessly, negligently and recklessly ran said engine and tender backwards over and against plaintiff, [177]*177Jessie Lamb, and she was then and thereby struck by said tender and while on said crossing and track, and thrown down against the tires, the ties, the stones and the ground with great force and violence, the said tender and engine passing on and over plaintiff’s left foot, whereby and by reason whereof her heel and under portion of her left foot was mashed and mangled; that by reason of the striking and knocking her down as aforesaid, she was wounded and bruised about the head, face, chest, body and limbs, whereby and by reason whereof she was seriously and permanently injured. 'that the train causing the injury consisted of a locomotive engine and tender; that said train approached said crossing at great speed, to wit, at the rate of twenty miles per hour, running -with said tender in front of said engine, there being coal and other substances on said tender; the said train was run in such a way that the headlight of the locomotive engine was hid from plaintiff’s view by the said tender in front and the said coal and other substances on said tender. That defendant’s servants in charge of said engine and tender carelessly and negligently omitted to give any signal or warning by bell or whistle or otherwise before reaching said crossing as required by statute in such case made and provided. That by reason of the darkness of the night and of the light of the locomotive engine being obstructed by said tender and by the coal and other material as aforesaid, she was unable to see the approach of the engine and tender, and on account of the failure of the defendant’s servants and agents in charge of said engine and tender failing and neglecting to ring the bell or blow the whistle or give any warning or signal whatever, she was unable to hear the approach of said engine and tender until so near her that she was unable and could not make her escape and avoid the accident aforesaid.”

The defenses were a general denial and contributory negligence.

[178]*178Pleasant Hill is a city of something over two thousand inhabitants. The injury here sued for occurred in that city in the evening of June 16, 1893, where Wyoming street crosses defendant’s track. This track runs from the southeast in a northwesterly direction, and divides the business from the residence portion of the city. Mrs. Lamb lived on the north side of the track. She had lived in the city about twenty-six years, and was familiar with the streets, and their crossings with the railroad tracks. On the evening of the accident she had occasion to call at Rayborn’s grocery store on the south side of the track, and left there for home about 8:15 p. m. of that evening. It is about one hundred and seventy-five feet from this store to the first railroad track in the direction plaintiff had to go to get home. There are some five or six railroad tracks across the street, at this point, and a large number of trains were passing each way every day. When she got within four or five feet of the first track she stopped. She then heard the whistle of the passenger train from Kansas City which was about due, and waited for it to cross Wyoming street, to the east before crossing the track. This train was on the second track from the south, where Mrs. Lamb was standing waiting for it to cross the street. When it whistled it was about one fourth of a mile west of the crossing. When it had crossed the street, and the rear end of the hindmost car had about reached the east side of the street, Mrs. Lamb attempted to cross the railroad track, when an engine and tender passed over Wyoming street, running backwards west on the south track at a rate of speed variously estimated by the witnesses at from six to twenty miles per hour, ran over her, bruising her head, face and limb, crushing her left heel and the under part of her left foot, and rendering her a cripple for life.

As to whether the bell on the engine to which the tender was attached was being rung at the time of the acci[179]*179dent the evidence was conflicting, but. no other signals were given. There were no lights upon the tender, and plaintiff could not see the lights on the engine. Nor was there any one in charge of the engine and tender at the time except the engineer.

Mrs. Lamb testified in her examination in chief that she heard the passenger train whistle and waited for it to pull in, then looked to the west, then to the east, then back to the west, and attempted to cross the track, when the engine and tender struck her; that she heard a whistle and just about that time, almost instantly, it struck her. That no bell was being sounded on the engine when the tender struck her.

On cross-examination she stated that when she first .stopped at the crossing of the railroad track she was looking toward the depot, and that there was nothing to obstruct her view of the depot, express office and water tank. That there was a dim light burning in the depot and also in the express office.

That she looked west before the passenger train came down and saw some box cars standing there about fifty yards .away without any engine to them. That she could see those ■ears, but that it was lighter in the west than in the east. That she looked east after the passenger train had gone by her, and again west, before attempting to cross the track. That she could have seen the engine and tender fifty yards to the east when she looked in that direction but for the smoke and dust between her and the engine and tender, and that there was no other obstruction so far as she knew that would have prevented her from so doing, and the smoke came from the passenger train.

She also testified that she had time enough to have crossed the track after she got to th¿ crossing before the passenger train arrived, but waited until it got by, for fear that she might be injured if she attempted to cross before. That when she last saw the passenger train, it was still mov[180]

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W. 659, 147 Mo. 171, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-mo-1898.